Try to keep your weight back a bit more, you may find you naturally slip forwards a touch descending either due to gravity or lowering your body when on the drops (descending on the drops is better as you lower your centre of gravity). Maybe make an effort to shunk back towards the rear of the saddle at the top of the hill.
On your outside leg (on the bend when you've raised the inner pedal to avoid grounding out) push down on the pedal as this helps keep the bike planted more, but remember to keep your knees and elbows "soft" to absorb any bumps.
You can counter steer round a bend if it tightens which means you are less likely to have to think of feathering a brake which is a bit dodgy when banked over. For a test find a flat and empty bit of road and build up a bit of speed. Now riding on the drops stop pedalling and with your right hand push down and out (at about 45 degrees). Do this gradually and smoothly and you'll find you start to move across to the right of the road without turning the bars or banking the bike at all. Try with the left as well and see how you find it. Next you can try the same thing on a fairly gradual descent to assist in cornering without banking the bike as far.
Once you get the hang of it you don't have to think about it and you can corner tighter and faster. You can actually turn a bike in an amazingly small space, but it can get a bit frightening when you get leant over too far and counter steer at the same time as it sort of whiplashes you round really quickly and you're out the other side quicker than you expected.
If you're trying to build up your confidence again then I'd freewheel down the hills rather than pedalling to moderate the speed a bit until you are happy with your technique again. Also make sure your tyres are correctly inflated and that you have confidence in their grip. I had some that I just wasn't happy with and never felt happy leaning the bike over on them as they always seemed to skip a bit once you got to a certain point.